He is one of the most reviled English kings in history. He drove his kingdom to the brink of civil war a dozen times in less than twenty years. He allowed his male lovers to rule the kingdom. He led a great army to the most ignominious military defeat in English history. His wife took a lover and invaded his kingdom, and he ended his reign wandering around Wales with a handful of followers, pursued by an army. He was the first king of England forced to abdicate his throne. Popular legend has it that he died screaming impaled on a red-hot poker, but in fact the time and place of his death are shrouded in mystery. His life reads like an Elizabethan tragedy, full of passionate doomed love, bloody revenge, jealousy, hatred, vindictiveness and obsession. He was Edward II, and this book tells his story. The focus here is on his relationships with his male 'favourites' and his disaffected wife, on his unorthodox lifestyle and hobbies, and on the mystery surrounding his death. Using almost exclusively fourteenth-century sources and Edward s own letters and speeches wherever possible, Kathryn Warner strips away the myths which have been created about him over the centuries, and provides a far more accurate and vivid picture of him than has previously been seen.
I - IO Smit , H. J. ed . , Bronnen Tot de Geschiedenis von den Handel met Engeland , Schotland en lerland , 1150-1485 , Rijks Geschiedkundige Publicatien 65 , The Hague 1928 Smith , J. Beverley , “ Edward II and the Allegiance of Wales ...
88–93; M. Brown, Bannockburn: The Scottish War and the British Isles, 1307–1323 (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2008), pp. 115–36. 4. Scalacronica, p. 75. 5. Scalacronica, pp. 74–7. 6. Johannis de Trokelowe et Henrici Blaneforde ...
In this new edition, Charles Forker provides the most complete and detailed edition of Edward II ever published. The introduction contains a fresh analysis of the first quarto (including new...
Edward II is, in a sense, Bertolt Brecht's only tragedy.
This student edition contains a completely new introduction by Stephen Guy-Bray, and offers students a useful and lively overview of recent criticism, an updated performance history paying greater attention to Derek Jarman's film, a ...
Woodstock, Earl of Kent, the younger of Edward II's half-brothers (as well as being the youngest son of Edward I, Kent was Isabella's first cousin via his mother Marguerite of France); and Roger Mortimer and other English exiles who had ...
The evidence remains controversial to this day, and here Paul Doherty examines it in his fascinating detective study, set in one of the most turbulent and exciting periods of English history.
Edward II: the Pliant King
This book provides the first account of how this reputation developed, providing new insights into the processes and priorities that shaped narratives of sexual transgression in medieval and early modern England.
T.B. Pugh, 'The Marcher Lords of Glamorgan and Morgannwg, 1317–1485', in T. B. Pugh (ed.), Glamorgan County History, III: The Middle Ages (1971), 603; CFR 1319–27, 69; CCR 1318–23, 543-4. Morris, Bigod Earls, 125. CCR 1288–96, 134.